Los Angeles Times

Chargers drop the ball

They practiced last- second trick play for years, then botched it.

- By Emmanuel Morgan

They had practiced that play for two years, keeping the trick in their back pocket for just the right moment.

On Sunday against the Carolina Panthers that moment came, with Keenan Allen and Austin Ekeler set to be heroes of the day with a simple f lick of the ball.

“I thought it was there,” coach Anthony Lynn said.

But even if the moment and preparatio­n were there, the execution wasn’t.

With the ball on the Carolina 28 and six seconds on the clock, quarterbac­k Justin Herbert shuff led left in the pocket, evaded the Panthers’ pass rush and threw to Allen.

The receiver caught the ball and pitched it back to Ekeler, who was trailing him. But Ekeler dropped the catchable lateral — albeit a little high and a tad bit behind him — and the busted play cemented a 21- 16 loss.

Allen jumped and threw a fist in the air in frustratio­n.

“It happened a lot faster than it did in practice, obviously in a game- time situation,” Allen said. “Honestly, we just have to execute. I think it’s a walk- in touchdown. I could’ve put it more in front of him.” Ekeler took blame too. “I’ve been looking forward to running that play,” Ekeler said. “I love that play every time we run it in practice and then we come out

and lay an egg when it should have worked.

“This conference would have been so much different, this little press conference, if I catch that ball. Man.”

Herbert also targeted Allen on the penultimat­e play — a jump ball near the back of the end zone, but Allen’s former teammate Tre Boston, the Panthers’ safety, batted it away.

The loss diminished Allen’s otherwise strong performanc­e: 13 catches for 132 yards and a touchdown.

His 14- yard touchdown

with nearly four minutes remaining made it 21- 16, placing the Chargers in striking distance. On third down, Herbert stepped up in the pocket and launched the pass to Allen, who caught it above Panthers linebacker Shaq Thompson for his first score of the season.

“He’s definitely one of the best receivers in this game,” tight end Hunter Henry said. “He knows how to get open and for a young quarterbac­k, I feel like that’s huge for him to have a receiver like that. We’re all try

ing to work for him, all trying to get open and make plays and Keenan does that on a consistent basis.”

Allen said the Panthers’ zone coverage created openings for Herbert to connect with him throughout the game. Herbert, who finished with 330 passing yards in his second career start, said getting the ball to Allen was part of the game plan.

“He’s an exceptiona­l talent,” Herbert said. “Anytime you’ve got him on the field, it creates huge mismatches. Just getting him the ball, he

makes special things happen.”

Lynn was pleased with the offense, especially on the last drive. He blamed the loss on turnovers. There were four, the last coming on the fumbled pitch play.

“Literally the only thing I dropped all day is a little pitch from Keenan Allen across the middle that would have ended up stealing the game,” Ekeler said after 11 catches for 84 yards. “So yeah, I feel like somebody punched me right in the face.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? AUSTIN EKELER can’t grab the ball after a failed, f inal lateral as Carolina’s Efe Obada recovers the fumble.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times AUSTIN EKELER can’t grab the ball after a failed, f inal lateral as Carolina’s Efe Obada recovers the fumble.

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